Showing posts with label deadnettles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deadnettles. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
white-lined sphinx ~ 04/15/14 ~ Pinnacles
Hyles lineata nectaring on Lamium amplexicaule
Lamiaceae
Well, I won't win any photography awards for these photos, but it's good enough to show how impressively long its proboscis is and for an ID. I've been casually calling these hummingbird moths. Problem is no one knows what I'm talking about. In my defense, I spotted what I believe was a Hyles lineata during a break in the rain at SFB Morse Botanical Reserve on February 28,
which happened to be around the time when I also started seeing rufous hummingbirds on migration. On an overcast day, the overall coloring for both the hefty moth
and the tan bird are remarkably similar, and the name stuck in my head. I have Paul to thank for correcting me when we saw another white-lined sphinx along the butterfly highway.
Thanks to the blurring of memory through time, I had forgotten all about
the clearwings (hey, if you don't use it, you lose it). Back when I lived in OH, I was familiar with the hummingbird clearwing (Hemaris thysbe), which can have the more traditional green and red coloring of hummingbirds. They were popular subjects of insect question calls to the museum and were frequently described as hovering like a hummingbird with a lobster tail. Pinnacles has a different clearwing, the bumble bee moth (Hemaris thetis), formerly classified under the eastern snowberry clearwing sphinx (Hemaris diffinis). I plan on keeping my eye out for them, because day-flying sphinx moths are fun to watch.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
giraffe's head ~ 03/26/14 ~ Ahwahnee Hills
Lamiaceae
Like with owl's-clovers, it doesn't take a big stretch of the imagination to see why the CA locals call this giraffe's head. They're often featured as a plant in bloom at the Garland Ranch visitor's center, yet after years of looking, I've never seen it growing there myself. So, I was a little surprised to find out this is not a native plant. It hails from Europe, Asia, and Africa, if Wikipedia is correct. For some reason the flowers remind me of CA hedgenettle, even though the leaves are totally different.